Abstract
Rice stripe virus (RSV), causal agent of rice stripe disease, is transmitted by the small brown planthopper (SBPH, Laodelphax striatellus) in a persistent manner. The midgut and salivary glands of SBPH are the first and last barriers in viral circulation and transmission, respectively; however, the precise mechanisms used by RSV to cross these organs and re-inoculate rice have not been fully elucidated. We obtained full-length cDNA of L. striatellus α-tubulin 2 (LsTUB) and found that RSV infection increased the level of LsTUB in vivo. Furthermore, LsTUB was shown to bind the RSV nonstructural protein 3 (NS3) in vitro. RNAi was used to reduce LsTUB expression, which caused a significant reduction in RSV titer, NS3 expression, RSV inoculation rates, and transmission to healthy plants. Electrical penetration graphs (EPG) showed that LsTUB knockdown by RNAi did not impact SBPH feeding; therefore, the reduction in RSV inoculation rate was likely caused by the decrease in RSV transmission. These findings suggest that LsTUB mediates the passage of RSV through midgut and salivary glands and leads to successful horizontal transmission.